Cochise County Sheriff Larry Dever is being sued for a share
of a $32 million lawsuit filed Friday in U.S. District Court.

The suit alleges the sheriff has done nothing to stop a
Cochise County rancher from apprehending illegal entrants on his own
property east of Douglas.

Filed by the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational
Fund, the suit alleges rancher Roger Barnett held a group of illegal
entrants at gunpoint on his property one year ago , shouted obscenities at
the group, kicked one of the women twice and threatened to shoot anybody who
tried to leave. It also lists 10 un-named co-conspirators who have known of
Barnett's actions in the past and did nothing to prevent them.

Calling the group "racist liars," Barnett says he doesn't
recall the incident ever taking place and said he hasn't been served with a
lawsuit.

Dever has not been served with a lawsuit and therefore had no
response, said Cochise County Sheriff's Department spokeswoman Carol Capas.

The suit alleges that on March 7, 2004, 19 illegal entrants
were resting in a wash near Douglas when Barnett pulled up on an all-terrain
vehicle with a large, barking dog. It claims that Barnett waved his cocked
gun at the group, and yelled obscenities at them.

Barnett then walked up to one of the women and kicked her in
the leg, then tried to kick her again, the suit alleges. He then called his
wife, who arrived with a truck and summoned the U.S. Border Patrol.

The entrants allegedly tried to tell the Border Patrol agents
what had happened but were menaced by Barnett.

The suit mentions that Barnett, his brother Donald and his
wife, Barbara, have admitted to turning over 12,000 illegal entrants to the
Border Patrol since 1998.

It names Dever because he has done nothing to stop Barnett
from apprehending illegal entrants, said MALDEF lawyer Araceli Perez.

"Little has been done to remedy this in his own back yard,"
she said.

The civil rights group hopes to send a message to vigilantes
that they cannot operate with impunity, Perez said.

She said the illegal entrants had notified the Border Patrol
of their treatment and that was the basis of the evidence against Barnett
and, subsequently, Dever.

She said MALDEF has the Border Patrol reports proving the
entrants reported their treatment to the arriving agents but did not share
them with the Arizona Daily Star when asked to.

The suit asks a jury to reward a total of $16 million in
actual damages and $16 million in punitive damages against all the
defendants, she said. The money sought is not broken up among the defendants
in any particular way but lists the Barnetts, Dever and the 10 unidentified
defendants.

"They're trying to destroy the United States like this,"
Barnett said.